Defamation Law and Social Attitudes
普通的不可理喻的人
Drawing on a thorough examination of case law, as well as extensive empirical research, including surveys involving over 4,000 members of the general public, interviews with judges and legal practitioners and focus groups representing various sections of the community, this book concludes that the law reflects fundamental misperceptions about what people think and how they are influenced by the media. The result is that the law tends to operate so as to unfairly disadvantage publishers, thus contributing to defamation law’s infamous ‘chilling effect’ on free speech.
‘Because the law of defamation is about reputation and thus necessarily about community and social attitudes, Baker’s serious empirical analysis of just those community and social attitudes about defamation and about reputation is a novel and important contribution to the literature on libel and slander. It will be a useful corrective to the various empirically unsupported assertions that dominate the court cases and the academic literature on the topic.’
– Frederick Schauer, University of Virginia, US
“这book shines a welcome light on a neglected area of defamation law: how juries and judges determine what it means to say a statement is defamatory. The author employs well-designed empirical research to provide concrete answers, and the reform he proposes is sensible and workable. The book should be must-reading for anyone who seeks to understand how the law does or does not protect reputation – especially lawyers and judges who try libel cases.’
– David A. Anderson, University of Texas Law School, US
‘When defamation jurors decide whether a statement about someone is “defamatory”, the question for them to answer is whether it would generate disapproval among “ordinary reasonable people”. It has generally been assumed that they answer this question correctly. What Roy Baker discovered through empirical research is that this assumption may often be wrong. This fascinating and important book sets out his findings, alongside a broad-ranging and perceptive analysis of the law’s approach to defining “defamatory”.’
– Michael Chesterman, The University of New South Wales, Australia
“这refreshingly original work is an essential addition to the libraries of all defamation aficionados. Through empirical evidence, including interviews with judges and practitioners, and surveys of the general public, Dr Baker convincingly demonstrates the human propensity to overestimate the negative effect that defamatory imputations may have on other people (“the third person effect”). The conventional “ordinary reasonable person” test becomes in practice an “ordinary unreasonable person” test, regrettably lowering the defamation threshold and further curtailing freedom of communication.’
– Michael Gillooly, The University of Western Australia
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd. is registered in the UK at: The Lypiatts, 15 Lansdown Road,
Cheltenham, Glos GL50 2JA. Registered number: 2041703
How To Order
Online
Get up to 20% discount when you order online
By Email
UK/ROW:[email protected]
N/S America:[email protected]
By Phone
UK/ROW:+44 (0) 1243 843291
N/S America:(800) 390 - 3149
Connect With Us
Find us on Facebook
facebook.com/EdwardElgarPublishing
Follow us on Twitter
For news, views and offers
Read our Blog
For news, views and debate from our authors and readers.
For More Information
UK/ROW:[email protected]
N/S America:[email protected]
